Were just really persistent people, said Luis Lecca, a martial arts instructor who has spent eight hours a day waiting and braving hecklers. We see something we want to do and we do it.

About a week ago, about 70 fans organized by the Web site LiningUp.net pitched camp near the landmark Graumans Chinese Theater, where the original Star Wars premiered in 1977.

Theyll wait there in shifts to see the first show when Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones opens May 16.

The ritual began in 1999 when fans, some from as far as Australia, organized to form a ticket line six weeks before the last film in the series opened, said event organizer Peter Genovese, a 26-year-old college student.

Participants earn time on the line. The amount of time each spends waiting determines their position in the final line when tickets are sold, Genovese said.

Members of the group also are required to donate least $50 for the Starlight Childrens Foundation, a nonprofit organization working with seriously ill children and their families.

When the last film in the series, Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace, premiered in 1999, a line of 150 people collected about $25,000 for the charity, Genovese said.

Among six people lounging on the street Wednesday was Steve Elms, a computer network operator. Keeping contact with his boss through a cellular phone, he plans to camp out for the first week and the final week.

I have no place else to go, said Elms, 39. Its just fun sitting on Hollywood Boulevard watching the freaks and the tourists walk by.

Its not been announced when tickets for Attack of the Clones will go on sale.

In between trips for fast food and late-night debates on the intricacies of the Star Wars films, Noel Lamothe already is busy making plans for another cinematic outing.

Were already talking about (a line in) 2005 for Episode III, he said.

In Seattle, Star Wars fans John Guth and Jeff Tweiten have been waiting outside a theater for tickets since Jan. 1. Donations from the 1,200-member Seattle Star Wars Society have helped pay for their food.